
Hopewell Rocks is one of the many beauties of the New Brunswick Coastline. Sculptured masterpieces, stretch along over a mile of the self-guided park. A spectacle to behold.

From local vegetable and fruit farms, to dairy, to beef, to lamb, to fields like these of blueberries in late fall, New Brunswick delights in growing its own.


What is so striking about New Brunswick is the diverse ecological balance – with low population and sustaining environment – moose, lynx, bobcat, coyote, white-tailed deer and black bear are to name a few that dwell here.

The Saint John River is thought to be the second-longest river on the North American eastern seaboard, dumping into the Bay of Fundy. With 170 miles of rugged cliffs and rumbling waves, the Bay has the world’s highest tides. Water levels rise and fall as much as 48 feet every day. As a result of those tides, a unique phenomenon occurs, where the river flows into the Bay of Fundy, and when the tides rise, the effect is a reversing falls.



